Results 231 to 240 of about 155,602 (285)
Distress Screening in a Cancer Survivorship Clinic: Impact on Psychosocial Referrals. [PDF]
Sloan H, Jennings SJ, Adair K, Stein A.
europepmc +1 more source
Narcissistic Traits and Psychological Distress Among Medical Students: Implications for Mental Health Support in Medical Education. [PDF]
Krnić S +4 more
europepmc +1 more source
Clinical utility of metagenomic next-generation sequencing in the diagnosis of severe influenza complicated by invasive pulmonary aspergillosis. [PDF]
Niu S, Guo L, Li Z, Liu Y, Zhao L.
europepmc +1 more source
Web attacks are a major security concern as novel attacks can be easily created by targeting dierent vulnerabilities, using dierent vulnerability exploits, attack payloads, and/or request encodings (obfuscation). Intrusion detection systems (IDS) aim to correctly detect attacks.
Vella, Mark Joseph +2 more
core +7 more sources
Sensitivity and Specificity of the Distress Impact Thermometer for the Detection of Psychological Distress Among CRC Survivors [PDF]
This study assessed the relative screening performance of the Distress Impact Thermometer (DIT) and cutoff levels with the established clinical case threshold of the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) among a sample of colorectal cancer (CRC) survivors.
Craike, Melinda +2 more
openaire +3 more sources
Distress Detection (Poster Abstract) [PDF]
Web attacks are a major security concern as novel attacks can be easily created by exploiting different vulnerabilities, using different attack payloads, and/or encodings (obfuscation). Intrusion detection systems (IDS) aim to correctly detect attacks. There are two main approaches to intrusion detection: misuse and anomaly detection.
Mark Vella, Sotirios Terzis, Marc Roper
openaire +2 more sources
Physicians' Detection of Psychological Distress in Primary-Care Clinics [PDF]
This study investigated the amount of psychological distress reported by 182 soldiers in the Israeli military and compared soldiers' self-ratings of distress with ratings by military physicians of observed distress. Comparisons indicated a low detection rate by physicians with only 13% of self-reported cases of emotional distress identified.
B, Maoz +5 more
openaire +3 more sources

